Marcos Gonçalves Lhano
Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia
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Featured researches published by Marcos Gonçalves Lhano.
Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment | 2007
Joachim Adis; Elke Bustorf; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Christiane Amédégnato; Ana Lúcia Nunes
Distribution of Cornops aquaticum, C. brevipenne, C. frenatum and C. paraguayense is given for Latin America and the Caribbean Islands, along with native host plants and other plants that are repeatedly attacked. A database has been produced following new examinations of museum specimens. Occurrences are depicted in maps arranged to collecting localities and biogeographic provinces. Resumo A distribuição de Cornops aquaticum, C. brevipenne, C. frenatum e C. paraguayens é apresentada para a Améria Latina e Ilhas do Caribe, juntamente com as plantas hospedeiras nativas e outras plantas repetidamente atacadas. Um banco de dados baseado em novas investigações de indivíduos depositados em museus foi produzido. As ocorrências são representadas em mapas conforme as localidades de coleta e províncias biogeográficas.
Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment | 2004
Joachim Adis; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Martin P. Hill; Wolfgang J. Junk; Marinêz Isaac Marques; Hardi Oberholzer
Cornops aquaticum (Bruner) is host specific on Eichhornia spp. and Pontederia spp. (Pontederiacae). Its present distribution ranges from Mexico to Argentina. The number of juvenile instars (5-7) apparently mirrors the photoperiod and temperature pulses of different climatical conditions in the respective geographical regions. Based on life-history data, three working hypotheses are proposed for forthcoming studies. These will test whether the varying number of juvenile instars represents a phenotypic plasticity of a single genotype or an adaptation that is genetically fixed, due to an evolutionary relationship of the host with its host-plant.
Journal of Orthoptera Research | 2008
Joachim Adis; Carlos Frankl Sperber; Edward G. Brede; Soledad Capello; María Celeste Franceschini; Martin P. Hill; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Marinêz M. Marques; Ana Lúcia Nunes; Perry Polar
Abstract The semi-aquatic grasshopper Cornops aquaticum is native to South America and inhabits lowlands from southern Mexico to Central Argentina and Uruguay. It is host-specific to aquatic plants in the genera Eichhornia and Pontederia. A quarantine population has existed in South Africa for 10 y, and it is planned to release it there as a biological control agent of water hyacinth, E. crassipes. Various studies of C. aquaticum are coordinated under HICWA (www.mpil-ploen.mpg.de). This paper compares the morphometry of the release population and 11 native populations in South America. We tested four hypotheses: 1) South African and South American populations of C. aquaticum differ in morphology; 2) the South African laboratory population is more similar to other isolated populations in South America than to nonisolated populations; 3) morphology differs across sites; 4) morphology differs with host plant. South African populations differed from continental nonisolated populations, but not from continental isolated ones. Isolated populations presented smaller individuals than nonisolated, but there was also a change in male morphology: while in nonisolated populations male wing length was similar to their body length, in isolated populations, male wings were smaller than body length. Females were larger when on Eicchornia azurea than on E. crassipes, while males presented larger wings than their body on E. azurea, and similar lengths on E. crassipes. These morphological changes may have resulted from phenotypic plasticity, selection for small size, or because of a loss of genetic diversity in quantitative traits.
Revista Brasileira De Entomologia | 2010
Fatima R. Jaloretto da Silva; Marinêz I. Marques; Leandro Dênis Battirola; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano
Cornops aquaticum (Bruner, 1906) (Orthoptera, Acrididae) develops its life cycle on aquatic macrophyte of the Pontederiaceae family. As grasshoppers are able to respond to the seasonal changes, the alternation of periods that occurs in the Pantanal may reflect in their biology. This study was carried out in the Pantanal of Pocone- MT, with the aim of evaluating possible variations in the fresh weight of the adults and nymphs of C. aquaticum. From March/2006 to February/2007, 50 individuals of C. aquaticum were collected each month. A total of 600 individuals was assessed, 43.5% of which were adults and 56.5% nymphs. The highest values of total fresh weight occurred in September (9.106g; 0.182g/individual) and October/2006 (8.865g; 0.177g/individual) and the lowest in March/2006 (3.413g; 0.068g/individual). Among the adult individuals the highest fresh weight was registered in September/2006 (8.680g; 0.223g/individual) and October/2006 (8.654g; 0.234g/individual), at the end of the dry period, and the lowest in March/2006 (1.792g; 0.138g/individual) during the flood period. The nymphs had the highest fresh weight in April/2006 (2.913g; 0.076g/individual) at the beginning of the draining period, whereas the lowest fresh weight occurred in October/2006 (0.211g; 0.016g/individual) at the beginning of the flood period. Only the variation in the average fresh weight of females was significant (f = 6.43; p = 0.001) with the highest recordings occurring during the flood period, what may show a reproductive strategy.
Zootaxa | 2016
Raysa Martins Lima; Luciano De Pinho Martins; Marcelo Ribeiro Pereira; Todor D. Ganchev; Olaf Jahn; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Marinêz Isaac Marques; Karl-L. Schuchmann
The first record of the Orthoptera species Lerneca inalata for Brazil is presented here. The taxon is represented by a new subspecies Lerneca inalata beripocone subsp. nov. (Phalangopsidae, Luzarinae), collected in the Pantanal of Poconé, Mato Grosso, Brazil. This work includes morphological and morphometric data as well as descriptions of female genitalia and calling song. The new subspecies has as diagnostic features the male genitalia with six ventral spines on the B sclerite, the first spine having a subtle bifurcation; the mid-region of the strongly sclerotized pseudepiphallus; inclination of C sclerite with slightly concave curvature; tegmina-length ratio and the speculum (syn. mirror) width approximately three times the length of the apical area. The description of the female genitalia and the calling song is presented for the first time for the species Lerneca inalata. A distribution map covers the local occurrence of its subspecies.
Check List | 2014
Daniela Santos M. Silva; Renan da Silva Olivier; Adriane Vieira Souza; Daiane de Jesus Oliveira; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Marinêz Isaac Marques
Two specimens of Temnomastax hamus Rehn & Rehn, 1942 were collected at the Advanced Base of Studies at the Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso in Pocone, Mato Grosso, Pantanal. These new records extend the known distribution of the species to include the Brazilian Pantanal.
Journal of Natural History | 2018
Raysa Martins Lima; Karl-L. Schuchmann; Ana Silvia de Oliveira Tissiani; Lorena Andrade Nunes; Olaf Jahn; Todor Ganchev; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Marinêz Isaac Marques
This study evaluates the relationship between shape and size of tegmen, harp, mirror, and spectral range of calling song frequency of a Neotropical cricket subpopulation (Lerneca inalata beripocone. In addition, we compare intraspecific morphological divergence and calling song properties between individuals from different sites of the Pantanal of Poconé, Mato Grosso, Brazil. Regression analysis showed that the dominant and maximum calling song frequencies were negatively correlated with tegmen size, i.e. frequencies are either lower or higher depending on the corresponding size variation in resonance structures of the forewings. Canonical variable analysis demonstrated marked intraspecific differences in morphometric characters between localities of a L. inalata subpopulation c. 35 km apart (SESC-Pantanal Advanced Research Base and Pouso Alegre Farm, Mato Grosso, Brazil). Lerneca inalata beripocone at SESC had larger forewings than conspecifics from Pouso Alegre Farm. These morphological variations of wing properties related to reproductive behaviours were interpreted as fitness parameters, likely shaped by restricted gene flow during temporal habitat isolation episodes. Such isolation patterns occur in the Pantanal wetlands for several months during the annual hydrological cycle.
Amazoniana-limnologia Et Oecologia Regionalis Systemae Fluminis Amazonas | 2005
Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Joachim Adis; Marinêz Isaac Marques; Leandro Dênis Battirola
Neotropical Entomology | 2010
Fatima R. Jaloretto da Silva; Marinêz Isaac Marques; Leandro Dênis Battirola; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano
Amazoniana-limnologia Et Oecologia Regionalis Systemae Fluminis Amazonas | 2005
María Celeste Franceschini; Soledad Capello; Marcos Gonçalves Lhano; Joachim Adis; María Laura de Wysiecki